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Volume 38 Number 2 -- Winter 2004

Symposium: Federal Privileges in the 21st Century

Table of Contents

Introduction by David P. Leonard

Relational and Informational Privileges and the Case of the Mysterious Mediation Privilege by Eileen A. Scallen

One Privilege to Rule Them All? Some Post-Sarbanes-Oxley and Other Reflections on a Federally Codified Attorney-Client Privilege by Timothy P. Glynn

The Medical Privilege in the Federal Courts--Should It Matter Whether Your Ego or Your Elbow Hurts? by Kenneth S. Broun

A Psychological Critique of the Assumptions Underlying the Law of Evidentiary Privileges: Insights From the Literature on Self-Disclosure by Edward J. Imwinkelried

Back to the Future with Privileges: Abandon Codification, not the Common Law by Paul R. Rice

A Legisprudential Analysis of Evidence Codification: Why Most Rules of Evidence Should Not Be Codified--But Privilege Law Should Be by Paul F. Kirgis

Government Privilege: A Cautionary Tale for Codifiers by Kenneth W. Graham, Jr.

Article

A Proposal for a Wholesale Reform of California's Sentencing Practice and Policy by Michael Vitiello and Clark Kelso

Note

The Role of Litigation in Education Reform: Holding California Responsible, While Preserving Local Control by Lisa Trifiletti